Nestor Rodriguez and Rich Corbin are joined by Mark White and Helles Belle to engage in conversation about how succesful corporations wind up losing it.

Abercrombe and Fitch CEO Mark Jeffries declares that he only wants his clothes worn by cool kids: “We go after the attractive all-American kid with a great attitude and a lot of friends. A lot of people don’t belong (in our clothes), and they can’t belong.” Their stock prices have gone down 50% since that proclamation became viral~!

Kodak the leading photography-camera and film corporation filed bankruptcy because they refused to evolve with the times. They hesitated to go digital and it cost them. Also Costco labels the Bible as fiction. Ooooooh someone’s in trouble!

Nestor Rodriguez and Rich Corbin are joined by Mark White and Helles Belle to engage in conversation about how succesful corporations wind up losing it.

Abercrombe and Fitch CEO Mark Jeffries declares that he only wants his clothes worn by cool kids: “We go after the attractive all-American kid with a great attitude and a lot of friends. A lot of people don’t belong (in our clothes), and they can’t belong.” Their stock prices have gone down 50% since that proclamation became viral~!

Kodak the leading photography-camera and film corporation filed bankruptcy because they refused to evolve with the times. They hesitated to go digital and it cost them. Also Costco labels the Bible as fiction. Ooooooh someone’s in trouble!

In this very personal, funny, and revealing hour, Annie opens up to Vic about her personal life, sharing hilarious stories about when she suddenly, and very unexpectedly, found herself a widow.

Having never dated anyone but her husband, Annie talks about how she eventually hit the internet looking for new love. There was the young guy looking for an “older lover”… and the outrageous older guy who bragged about “being big.”

As a breast cancer survivor, Annie was especially worried… how would men react when they discovered she only had one breast. Was she still lovable in the eyes of a man? Could she accepted just as she was? Would she ever find love? The answer is revealed by the end of this episode!

Annie has written and performed a one woman show about her search for love. Below is a link to a 10 minute video from that show, “Giving Up is Hard to Do!” (Also below are Annie’s full IMDB credits.)

Filmmaker, cartoonist, storyboarder, and all around good guy, Waylon Bacon is in the studio to talk movies, music, LA vs SF, and what it takes to actually put something out there for people to see.

From the outside looking in, LA is thought of as that place where a bunch of self-important wanna be actors, directors, and producers come to jerk each other off and snort a bunch of coke….and you’re right…but…

The most talented people are those who do what they do because they have to. They have no choice. Ed Gein used human flesh. Waylon Bacon uses film.

Waylon makes me happy. Myself, being one of those guys who pretend to shun the celebrity aspect of living in Los Angeles, it pleases me to have a conversation with someone who would be making movies regardless of whether he lived in Los Angeles, San Francisco or Chesterpeak, Arkansas. Not everything is for money, not everything is for fame.